U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is no longer accepting bond payments for detained people at the agency’s Chicago office amid closures related to efforts to contain COVID-19, according to an official with ICE.

The federal agency had previously stopped taking payments at its offices in Milwaukee and Springfield, Missouri, but Chicago has now been added to the list. The Chicago office will remain closed for the next 14 days, according to the ICE official, who asked not to be named because she wasn’t authorized to release the information.

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Anyone seeking to bond out someone from an area detention facility will have to travel to Indianapolis; Louisville; Wichita, Kansas; or Kansas City, Missouri, according to the official. The detained person will then be released from the facility where the person is being held. Around Chicago, ICE contracts with some local jails to detain people in immigration custody.

The McHenry County Jail is one of the facilities ICE uses. That facility will not directly release anyone from immigration custody. If a person there posts bond, the person will be transferred to a different facility and released from there, if a bond payment is posted before 11 a.m. that day, according to the ICE official.

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As of Thursday, there had been no confirmed cases of COVID-19 among federal employees working out of the Chicago office, according to an ICE official.

In New Jersey, a medical staff member at the Elizabeth Detention Center, where people in ICE custody are kept, tested positive for COVID-19 this week, according to the Marshall Project, a nonprofit news organization.

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Earlier this week, ICE announced it was adjusting its enforcement efforts throughout the country, though not halting deportations. Immigration enforcement agents will focus on “public safety risks and individuals subject to mandatory detention based on criminal grounds,” the agency said in a statement.

Immigration advocates for weeks have called on ICE to completely halt deportations and arrests as the number of cases of COVID-19 grew and was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization.

Eréndira Rendón of Chicago’s Resurrection Project, an organization that advocates for immigrants, said her group has heard from families who have relatives detained and who are worried about the virus spreading to jails.

“ICE should cease all operations, not only because they are terrorizing our communities during this pandemic,” Rendón said. “Worst-case scenario is that a person with COVID-19 is detained and spreads like wildfire inside a facility.”